The Dealings of Captain Sharkey, by Arthur Conan Doyle

The Blighting of Sharkey

Sharkey, the abominable Sharkey, was out again. After two years of the Coromandel coast, his black
barque of death, the Happy Delivery, was prowling off the Spanish Main, while trader and fisher flew for dear
life at the menace of that patched fore-topsail, rising slowly over the violet rim of the tropical sea.

As the birds cower when the shadow of the hawk falls athwart the field, or as the jungle folk crouch and shiver when
the coughing cry of the tiger is heard in the night-time, so through all the busy world of ships, from the whalers of
Nantucket to the tobacco ships of Charleston, and from the Spanish supply ships of Cadiz to the sugar merchants of the
Main, there spread the rumour of the black curse of the ocean.

Some hugged the shore, ready to make for the nearest port, while others struck far out beyond the known lines of
commerce, but none were so stout-hearted that they did not breathe more freely when their passengers and cargoes were
safe under the guns of some mothering fort.

Through all the islands there ran tales of charred derelicts at sea, of sudden glares seen afar in the night-time,
and of withered bodies stretched upon the sand of waterless Bahama Keys. All the old signs were there to show that
Sharkey was at his bloody game once more.

These fair waters and yellow-rimmed palm-nodding islands are the traditional home of the sea rover. First it was the
gentleman adventurer, the man of family and honour, who fought as a patriot, though he was ready to take his payment in
Spanish plunder.

Then, within a century, his debonair figure had passed to make room for the buccaneers, robbers pure and simple, yet
with some organised code of their own, commanded by notable chieftains, and taking in hand great concerted
enterprises.

They, too, passed with their fleets and their sacking of cities, to make room for the worst of all, the lonely,
outcast pirate, the bloody Ishmael of the seas, at war with the whole human race. This was the vile brood which the
early eighteenth century had spawned forth, and of them all there was none who could compare in audacity, wickedness,
and evil repute with the unutterable Sharkey.

It was early in May, in the year 1720, that the Happy Delivery lay with her fore-yard aback some five
leagues west of the Windward Passage, waiting to see what rich, helpless craft the trade-wind might bring down to
her.

Three days she had lain there, a sinister black speck, in the centre of the great sapphire circle of the ocean. Far
to the south-east the low blue hills of Hispaniola showed up on the skyline.

Hour by hour as he waited without avail, Sharkey’s savage temper had risen, for his arrogant spirit chafed against
any contradiction, even from Fate itself. To his quartermaster, Ned Galloway, he had said that night, with his odious
neighing laugh, that the crew of the next captured vessel should answer to him for having kept him waiting so long.

The cabin of the pirate barque was a good-sized room, hung with much tarnished finery, and presenting a strange
medley of luxury and disorder. The panelling of carved and polished sandal-wood was blotched with foul smudges and
chipped with bullet-marks fired in some drunken revelry.

Rich velvets and laces were heaped upon the brocaded settees, while metal-work and pictures of great price filled
every niche and corner, for anything which caught the pirate’s fancy in the sack of a hundred vessels was thrown
haphazard into his chamber. A rich, soft carpet covered the floor, but it was mottled with wine-stains and charred with
burned tobacco.

Above, a great brass hanging-lamp threw a brilliant yellow light upon this singular apartment, and upon the two men
who sat in their shirt-sleeves with the wine between them, and the cards in their hands, deep in a game of piquet. Both
were smoking long pipes, and the thin blue reek filled the cabin and floated through the skylight above them, which,
half opened, disclosed a slip of deep violet sky spangled with great silver stars.

Ned Galloway, the quartermaster, was a huge New England wastrel, the one rotten branch upon a goodly Puritan family
tree. His robust limbs and giant frame were the heritage of a long line of God-fearing ancestors, while his black
savage heart was all his own. Bearded to the temples, with fierce blue eyes, a tangled lion’s mane of coarse, dark
hair, and huge gold rings in his ears, he was the idol of the women in every waterside hell from the Tortugas to
Maracaibo on the Main. A red cap, a blue silken shirt, brown velvet breeches with gaudy knee-ribbons, and high
sea-boots made up the costume of the rover Hercules.

A very different figure was Captain John Sharkey. His thin, drawn, clean-shaven face was corpse-like in its pallor,
and all the suns of the Indies could but turn it to a more deathly parchment tint. He was part bald, with a few lank
locks of tow-like hair, and a steep, narrow forehead. His thin nose jutted sharply forth, and near-set on either side
of it were those filmy blue eyes, red-rimmed like those of a white bull-terrier, from which strong men winced away in
fear and loathing. His bony hands, with long, thin fingers which quivered ceaselessly like the antennae of an insect,
were toying constantly with the cards and the heap of gold moidores which lay before him. His dress was of some sober
drab material, but, indeed, the men who looked upon that fearsome face had little thought for the costume of its
owner.

The game was brought to a sudden interruption, for the cabin door was swung rudely open, and two rough
fellows—Israel Martin, the boatswain, and Red Foley, the gunner—rushed into the cabin. In an instant Sharkey was on his
feet with a pistol in either hand and murder in his eyes.

“Sink you for villains!” he cried. “I see well that if I do not shoot one of you from time to time you will forget
the man I am. What mean you by entering my cabin as though it were a Wapping alehouse?”

“Nay, Captain Sharkey,” said Martin, with a sullen frown upon his brick-red face, “it is even such talk as this
which has set us by the ears. We have had enough of it.”

“And more than enough,” said Red Foley, the gunner. “There be no mates aboard a pirate craft, and so the boatswain,
the gunner, and the quartermaster are the officers.”

“Did I gainsay it?” asked Sharkey with an oath.

“You have miscalled us and mishandled us before the men, and we scarce know at this moment why we should risk our
lives in fighting for the cabin and against the foc’sle.”

Sharkey saw that something serious was in the wind. He laid down his pistols and leaned back in his chair with a
flash of his yellow fangs.

“Nay, this is sad talk,” said he, “that two stout fellows who have emptied many a bottle and cut many a throat with
me, should now fall out over nothing. I know you to be roaring boys who would go with me against the devil himself if I
bid you. Let the steward bring cups and drown all unkindness between us.”

“It is no time for drinking, Captain Sharkey,” said Martin. “The men are holding council round the mainmast, and may
be aft at any minute. They mean mischief, Captain Sharkey, and we have come to warn you.”

Sharkey sprang for the brass-handled sword which hung from the wall.

“Sink them for rascals!” he cried. “When I have gutted one or two of them they may hear reason.”

But the others barred his frantic way to the door.

“There are forty of them under the lead of Sweetlocks, the master,” said Martin, “and on the open deck they would
surely cut you to pieces. Here within the cabin it may be that we can hold them off at the points of our pistols.” He
had hardly spoken when there came the tread of many heavy feet upon the deck. Then there was a pause with no sound but
the gentle lapping of the water against the sides of the pirate vessel. Finally, a crashing blow as from a pistol-butt
fell upon the door, and an instant afterwards Sweetlocks himself, a tall, dark man, with a deep red birth-mark blazing
upon his cheek, strode into the cabin. His swaggering air sank somewhat as he looked into those pale and filmy
eyes.

“Captain Sharkey,” said he, “I come as spokesman of the crew.”

“So I have heard, Sweetlocks,” said the captain, softly. “I may live to rip you the length of your vest for this
night’s work.”

“That is as it may be, Captain Sharkey,” the master answered, “but if you will look up you will see that I have
those at my back who will not see me mishandled.”

“Cursed if we do!” growled a deep voice from above, and glancing upwards the officers in the cabin were aware of a
line of fierce, bearded, sun-blackened faces looking down at them through the open skylight.

“Well, what would you have?” asked Sharkey. “Put it in words, man, and let us have an end of it.”

“The men think,” said Sweetlocks, “that you are the devil himself, and that there will be no luck for them whilst
they sail the sea in such company. Time was when we did our two or three craft a day, and every man had women and
dollars to his liking, but now for a long week we have not raised a sail, and save for three beggarly sloops, have
taken never a vessel since we passed the Bahama Bank. Also, they know that you killed Jack Bartholomew, the carpenter,
by beating his head in with a bucket, so that each of us goes in fear of his life. Also, the rum has given out, and we
are hard put to it for liquor. Also, you sit in your cabin whilst it is in the articles that you should drink and roar
with the crew. For all these reasons it has been this day in general meeting decreed——”

Sharkey had stealthily cocked a pistol under the table, so it may have been as well for the mutinous master that he
never reached the end of his discourse, for even as he came to it there was a swift patter of feet upon the deck, and a
ship lad, wild with his tidings, rushed into the room.

“A craft!” he yelled. “A great craft, and close aboard us!”

In a flash the quarrel was forgotten, and the pirates were rushing to quarters. Sure enough, surging slowly down
before the gentle trade-wind, a great full-rigged ship, with all sail set, was close beside them.

It was clear that she had come from afar and knew nothing of the ways of the Caribbean Sea, for she made no effort
to avoid the low, dark craft which lay so close upon her bow, but blundered on as if her mere size would avail her.

So daring was she, that for an instant the Rovers, as they flew to loose the tackles of their guns, and hoisted
their battle-lanterns, believed that a man-of-war had caught them napping.

But at the sight of her bulging, portless sides and merchant rig a shout of exultation broke from amongst them, and
in an instant they had swung round their fore-yard, and darting alongside they had grappled with her and flung a spray
of shrieking, cursing ruffians upon her deck.

Half a dozen seamen of the night-watch were cut down where they stood, the mate was felled by Sharkey and tossed
overboard by Ned Galloway, and before the sleepers had time to sit up in their berths, the vessel was in the hands of
the pirates.

The prize proved to be the full-rigged ship Portobello—Captain Hardy, master—bound from London to Kingston
in Jamaica, with a cargo of cotton goods and hoop-iron.

Having secured their prisoners, all huddled together in a dazed, distracted group, the pirates spread over the
vessel in search of plunder, handing all that was found to the giant quartermaster, who in turn passed it over the side
of the Happy Delivery and laid it under guard at the foot of her mainmast.

The cargo was useless, but there were a thousand guineas in the ship’s strong-box, and there were some eight or ten
passengers, three of them wealthy Jamaica merchants, all bringing home well-filled boxes from their London visit.

When all the plunder was gathered, the passengers and crew were dragged to the waist, and under the cold smile of
Sharkey each in turn was thrown over the side—Sweetlocks standing by the rail and hamstringing them with his cutlass as
they passed over, lest some strong swimmer should rise in judgment against them. A portly, grey-haired woman, the wife
of one of the planters, was among the captives, but she also was thrust screaming and clutching over the side.

“Mercy, you hussy!” neighed Sharkey, “you are surely a good twenty years too old for that.”

The captain of the Portobello, a hale, blue-eyed grey-beard, was the last upon the deck. He stood, a
thick-set resolute figure, in the glare of the lanterns, while Sharkey bowed and smirked before him.

“One skipper should show courtesy to another,” said he, “and sink me if Captain Sharkey would be behind in good
manners! I have held you to the last, as you see, where a brave man should be; so now, my bully, you have seen the end
of them, and may step over with an easy mind.”

“So I shall, Captain Sharkey,” said the old seaman, “for I have done my duty so far as my power lay. But before I go
over I would say a word in your ear.”

“If it be to soften me, you may save your breath. You have kept us waiting here for three days, and curse me if one
of you shall live!”

“Nay, it is to tell you what you should know. You have not yet found what is the true treasure aboard of this
ship.”

“Not found it? Sink me, but I will slice your liver, Captain Hardy, if you do not make good your words! Where is
this treasure you speak of?”

“It is not a treasure of gold, but it is a fair maid, which may be no less welcome.”

“Where is she, then? And why was she not with the others?”

“I will tell you why she was not with the others. She is the only daughter of the Count and Countess Ramirez, who
are amongst those whom you have murdered. Her name is Inez Ramirez, and she is of the best blood of Spain, her father
being Governor of Chagre, to which he was now bound. It chanced that she was found to have formed an attachment, as
maids will, to one far beneath her in rank aboard this ship; so her parents, being people of great power, whose word is
not to be gainsaid, constrained me to confine her close in a special cabin aft of my own. Here she was held straitly,
all food being carried to her, and she allowed to see no one. This I tell you as a last gift, though why I should make
it to you I do not know, for indeed you are a most bloody rascal, and it comforts me in dying to think that you will
surely be gallow’s-meat in this world, and hell’s-meat in the next.”

At the words he ran to the rail, and vaulted over into the darkness, praying as he sank into the depths of the sea,
that the betrayal of this maid might not be counted too heavily against his soul.

The body of Captain Hardy had not yet settled upon the sand forty fathoms deep before the pirates had rushed along
the cabin gangway. There, sure enough, at the further end, was a barred door, overlooked in their previous search.
There was no key, but they beat it in with their gunstocks, whilst shriek after shriek came from within. In the light
of their outstretched, lanterns they saw a young woman, in the very prime and fullness of her youth, crouching in a
corner, her unkempt hair hanging to the ground, her dark eyes glaring with fear, her lovely form straining away in
horror from this inrush of savage blood-stained men. Rough hands seized her, she was jerked to her feet, and dragged
with scream on scream to where John Sharkey awaited her. He held the light long and fondly to her face, then, laughing
loudly, he bent forward and left his red hand-print upon her cheek.

“’Tis the rovers’ brand, lass, that he marks his ewes. Take her to the cabin and use her well. Now, hearties, get
her under water, and out to our luck once more.”

Within an hour the good ship Portobello had settled down to her doom, till she lay beside her murdered
passengers upon the Caribbean sand, while the pirate barque, her deck littered with plunder, was heading northward in
search of another victim.

There was a carouse that night in the cabin of the Happy Delivery, at which three men drank deep. They were
the captain, the quartermaster, and Baldy Stable, the surgeon, a man who had held the first practice in Charleston,
until, misusing a patient, he fled from justice, and took his skill over to the pirates. A bloated fat man he was, with
a creased neck and a great shining scalp, which gave him his name. Sharkey had put for the moment all thought of mutiny
out of his head, knowing that no animal is fierce when it is over-fed, and that whilst the plunder of the great ship
was new to them he need fear no trouble from his crew. He gave himself up, therefore, to the wine and the riot,
shouting and roaring with his boon companions. All three were flushed and mad, ripe for any devilment, when the thought
of the woman crossed the pirate’s evil mind. He yelled to the negro steward that he should bring her on the
instant.

Inez Ramirez had now realised it all—the death of her father and mother, and her own position in the hands of their
murderers. Yet calmness had come with the knowledge, and there was no sign of terror in her proud, dark face as she was
led into the cabin, but rather a strange, firm set of the mouth and an exultant gleam of the eyes, like one who sees
great hopes in the future. She smiled at the pirate captain as he rose and seized her by the waist.

“‘Fore God! this is a lass of spirit,” cried Sharkey; passing his arm round her. “She was born to be a Rover’s
bride. Come, my bird, and drink to our better friendship.”

“Article Six!” hiccoughed the doctor. “All bona robas in common.”

“Aye! we hold you to that, Captain Sharkey,” said Galloway. “It is so writ in Article Six.”

“I will cut the man into ounces who comes betwixt us!” cried Sharkey, as he turned his fish-like eyes from one to
the other. “Nay, lass, the man is not born that will take you from John Sharkey. Sit here upon my knee, and place your
arm round me so. Sink me, if she has not learned to love me at sight! Tell me, my pretty, why you were so mishandled
and laid in the bilboes aboard yonder craft?”

The woman shook her head and smiled. “No Inglese—no Inglese,” she lisped. She had drunk off the bumper of wine which
Sharkey held to her, and her dark eyes gleamed more brightly than before. Sitting on Sharkey’s knee, her arm encircled
his neck, and her hand toyed with his hair, his ear, his cheek. Even the strange quartermaster and the hardened surgeon
felt a horror as they watched her, but Sharkey laughed in his joy. “Curse me, if she is not a lass of metal!” he cried,
as he pressed her to him and kissed her unresisting lips.

But a strange intent look of interest had come into the surgeon’s eyes as he watched her, and his face set rigidly,
as if a fearsome thought had entered his mind. There stole a grey pallor over his bull face, mottling all the red of
the tropics and the flush of the wine.

“Look at her hand, Captain Sharkey!” he cried. “For the Lord’s sake, look at her hand!”

Sharkey stared down at the hand which had fondled him. It was of a strange dead pallor, with a yellow shiny web
betwixt the fingers. All over it was a white fluffy dust, like the flour of a new-baked loaf. It lay thick on Sharkey’s
neck and cheek. With a cry he flung the woman from his lap; but in an instant, with a wild-cat bound, and a scream of
triumphant malice, she had sprung at the surgeon, who vanished yelling under the table. One of her clawing hands
grasped Galloway by the beard, but he tore himself away, and snatching a pike, held her off from him as she gibbered
and mowed with the blazing eyes of a maniac.

The black steward had run in on the sudden turmoil, and among them they forced the mad creature back into the cabin
and turned the key upon her. Then the three sank panting into their chairs and looked with eyes of horror upon each
other. The same word was in the mind of each, but Galloway was the first to speak it.

“A leper!” he cried. “She has us all, curse her!”

“Not me,” said the surgeon; “she never laid her finger on me.”

“For that matter,” cried Galloway, “it was but my beard that she touched. I will have every hair of it off before
morning.”

“Dolts that we are!” the surgeon shouted, beating his head with-his hand. “Tainted or no, we shall never know a
moment’s peace till the year is up and the time of danger past. ‘Fore God, that merchant skipper has left his mark on
us, and pretty fools we were to think that such a maid would be quarantined for the cause he gave. It is easy to see
now that her corruption broke forth in the journey, and that save throwing her over they had no choice but to board her
up until they should come to some port with a lazarette.”

Sharkey had sat leaning back in his chair with a ghastly face while he listened to the surgeon’s words. He mopped
himself with his red handkerchief, and wiped away the fatal dust with which he was smeared.

“What of me?” he croaked. “What say you, Baldy Stable? Is there a chance for me? Curse you for a villain! speak out,
or I will drub you within an inch of your life, and that inch also! Is there a chance for me, I say!”

But the surgeon shook his head. “Captain Sharkey,” said he, “it would be an ill deed to speak you false. The taint
is on you. No man on whom the leper scales have rested is ever clean again.”

Sharkey’s head fell forward on his chest, and he sat motionless, stricken by this great and sudden horror, looking
with his smouldering eyes into his fearsome future. Softly the mate and the surgeon rose from their places, and
stealing out from the poisoned air of the cabin, came forth into the freshness of the early dawn, with the soft,
scent-laden breeze in their faces and the first red feathers of cloud catching the earliest gleam of the rising sun as
it shot its golden rays over the palm-clad ridges of distant Hispaniola.

That morning a second council of the Rovers was held at the base of the mainmast, and a deputation chosen to see the
captain. They were approaching the after-cabins when Sharkey came forth, the old devil in his eyes, and his bandolier
with a pair of pistols over his shoulder.

“Sink you all for villains!” he cried. “Would you dare cross my hawse? Stand out, Sweetlocks, and I will lay you
open! Here, Galloway, Martin, Foley, stand by me and lash the dogs to their kennel!”

But his officers had deserted him, and there was none to come to his aid. There was a rush of the pirates. One was
shot through the body, but an instant afterwards Sharkey had been seized and was triced to his own mainmast. His filmy
eyes looked round from face to face, and there was none who felt the happier for having met them.

“Captain Sharkey,” said Sweetlocks, “you have mishandled many of us, and you have now pistolled John Masters,
besides killing Bartholomew, the carpenter, by braining him with a bucket. All this might have been forgiven you, in
that you have been our leader for years, and that we have signed articles to serve under you while the voyage lasts.
But now we have heard of this bona roba on board, and we know that you are poisoned to the marrow, and that
while you rot there will be no safety for any of us, but that we shall all be turned into filth and corruption.
Therefore, John Sharkey, we Rovers of the Happy Delivery, in council assembled, have decreed that while there
be yet time, before the plague spreads, you shall be set adrift in a boat to find such a fate as Fortune may be pleased
to send you.”

John Sharkey said nothing, but slowly circling his head, he cursed them all with his baleful gaze. The ship’s dinghy
had been lowered, and he, with his hands still tied, was dropped into it on the bight of a rope.

“Cast her off!” cried Sweetlocks.

“Nay, hold hard a moment, Master Sweetlocks!” shouted one of the crew. “What of the wench? Is she to bide aboard and
poison us all?”

“Send her off with her mate!” cried another, and the Rovers roared their approval. Driven forth at the end of pikes,
the girl was pushed towards the boat. With all the spirit of Spain in her rotting body she flashed triumphant glances
on her captors.

“Perros! Perros Ingleses! Lepero, Lepero!” she cried in exultation, as they thrust her over into the boat.

“Good luck, captain! God speed you on your honeymoon!” cried a chorus of mocking voices, as the painter was
unloosed, and the Happy Delivery, running full before the trade-wind, left the little boat astern, a tiny dot
upon the vast expanse of the lonely sea.

Extract from the log of H.M. fifty-gun ship Hecate in her cruise off the American Main.

“Jan. 26, 1721.—This day, the junk having become unfit for food, and five of the crew down with scurvy, I
ordered that we send two boats ashore at the nor’-western point of Hispaniola, to seek for fresh fruit, and perchance
shoot some of the wild oxen with which the island abounds.

“7 p.m.—The boats have returned with good store of green stuff and two bullocks. Mr. Woodruff, the master,
reports that near the landing-place at the edge of the forest was found the skeleton of a woman, clad in European
dress, of such sort as to show that she may have been a person of quality. Her head had been crushed by a great stone
which lay beside her. Hard by was a grass hut, and signs that a man had dwelt therein for some time, as was shown by
charred wood, bones and other traces. There is a rumour upon the coast that Sharkey, the bloody pirate, was marooned in
these parts last year, but whether he has made his way into the interior, or whether he has been picked up by some
craft, there is no means of knowing. If he be once again afloat, then I pray that God send him under our guns.”